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Legacy Course Modules

dreamwork can change your life

Our exploration of dreams will begin at the beginning – why should we be bothered to pay attention to our dreams?

[available as soon as you join!]

Dream Recall in Context

Throughout history, people have known that dreams bring valuable wisdom. What did our ancestors make of dreams & dreaming? How can we best remember our dreams?

[available as soon as you join!]

Understanding Jung’s Structure of the Psyche

Jung mapped our inner terrain. His conceptualization of the psyche provides a structure for understanding the mystery of dreams.

[available as soon as you join!]

Objective and Subjective Dream Interpretation

Is your dream about your boss really about your boss? Sometimes the dream maker points to the inner world, and sometimes to the outer.

[available after three months]

Dramatic Structure of Dreams

Jung said that “a dream is a theater in which the dreamer is himself, the scene, the player, the prompter, the producer, the author, the public, and the critic.”

[available after three months]

Association and Amplification

Each of us has a personal mythology woven together with memories and experiences. When these are illuminated with ancient themes, we can see the hand of the Self at work.

[available after three months]

Shadow in Dreams

Those parts of ourselves we would least like to know about often visit us during the night.

[available after six months]

Anima and Animus in Dreams

Our drive towards wholeness evokes the image of the beloved. When the archetypal contrasexual shows up in dreams, the psyche is concerned with adaptation to the inner world.

[available after six months]

Complexes in Dreams

Our unresolved inner conflicts give rise to the nightly images that we call dreams as a way of bringing us back into balance.

[available after six months]

The Self in Dreams

Jung called the Self  “the center and circumference” of the personality. Dreams that feature the Self are usually experienced as powerfully numinous and transpersonal.

[available after nine months]

Active Imagination

Jung developed the technique of active imagination as a way to dialogue with the unconscious in order to expand on the experience of a dream image.

[available after nine months]

Bringing it all Together

In our final module, we demonstrate how to weave the threads together into a cohesive tapestry which we call “the interpretation.”

[available after nine months]